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Staff members of Carolina Parent magazine provide insight, tips and suggestions on making the most of family life.

Pre-Teens Dressing Too Sexy for Halloween?

If sticker shock doesn’t get you, the sexy nurse, the naughty school girl or the she-devil might, if you’re out shopping for Halloween costumes with your tween.

Finding the right costume for her pre-teen has become a hellish experience, a friend recently confided.

Walking through the stores with her 12½-year-old and 8-year-old girls, she came face to face with the tramps—full-chested models wearing plunging necklines and shorts that exposed long legs in six-inch heels. They were plastered on the wall in full color.

“I was utterly embarrassed at what some of the costumes look like,” my friend said. “Plus, the expense is outrageous.”

For tweens—8- to 12-year-olds—who have suddenly grown into adult sizes, Halloween presents dangerous new territory. Plus, vampy costumes seem to be increasingly marketed to younger children.

Although my friend’s tween actually wasn’t interested in the “trampy” costumes, she was at an awkward age for costumes, where a gap in sizing narrowed her options. She knew she didn’t want a sexy costume, but she also didn’t want something that was Hello Kitty.

“There were no good choices between kids and young teenagers—everything was really low-cut,” my friend said. “In past years, we’ve just pulled stuff out of the closets, but this year, she was invited to a party, so I decided to go ahead and get her a costume.”

Tweens often aren’t aware of the signals they’re sending dressed in sexy, grown-up costumes, said another friend, who says she tells her pre-teen to think about the messages clothes may send.

“You want to attract boys that are respectful of you,” she tells her daughter. “You may inadvertently be attracting a different person.”

As parents, we need to make our children aware of the dangers it might pose, she says. “Someone might get the wrong impression.”

A quick review of Internet message boards reveals that, in dressing rooms across the nation, many parents are battling the issue of inappropriate dress with their pre-teens.

Tweens aren’t interested in looking sexy as much as they’re trying to look like other pre-teens so as to belong to the group, says Nancy Rue, an author who writes self-help books for tweens and teen girls to help them through adolescence.

“There’s nothing wrong with wanting to dress like everyone else, but it definitely provides a teachable moment for moms and for dads when their daughter comes home and says everybody else is dressing up like French maids for Halloween.”

Faced with such a situation, she offers these tips to parents:

  • Sit down and have a heart-to-heart with your daughter about why they want that particular look. Ask them, “Do you think everyone else is going to show up as a sex kitten, or have you really even thought about it?” Rather than lecture, it’s a good time to chat about the reasons. You might mention that it really isn’t kids who have established this trend, but adults in marketing, Rue says.
  • Suggest that not everybody is going to be baring it all, despite what they may have heard in the girls’ restroom.
  • Establish some guidelines—such as, how short a hemline should be—before you go shopping or before you go into the attic to start pulling things out, so you don’t have an argument in the costume aisle. This way, your tween can make choices within those boundaries.

Still Rue admits there’s always a tween who will want to push the envelope: “No matter what, she’ll always want to go an inch shorter, an inch lower, and that’s a great time for her to learn the meaning of the word, ‘enough.’ You are her parents after all, so love her enough to let her hate you for an hour or two. She’s going to get over it.”

For the rest of tweens, there’s some middle ground out there. In my friend’s case, her daughter settled on a bumblebee costume, and they both flew out of the store happy.

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Wow, I thought it was bad enough when women would dress slu++y on Oct 31 but then expect people to respect them on Nov 1. That's a huge pet peeve of mine. But a 12 year old doing that? Well, then sorry Mom and Dad, but it's time you stepped up and were the parent in the situation.

"Tweens often aren’t aware of the signals they’re sending dressed in sexy, grown-up costumes"

It's not just the tweens; many college girls and some adult women suffer that same problem. Then they get upset when people respond to those signals.

you know if you keep you kids on lock down then you have a bigger problem on your hands they rebel and there not honest with you when it matters the most. Talk to your kids don't keep so tight of a grip. Otherwise you will never know what there doing.

mt1190, good point. One can be too strict on their kids. You do have to trust them, until or if they break your trust. I know I learned my most valuable lessons from mistakes.

if you talk with your kids and don't make them fear you when something really does go wrong or they have a hard question to ask they will not be afrade to.

Can someone tell me where this store is located?

For those hoping to save money and still find a good costume: Try goodwill! My family has always made trips to goodwill to find the perfect costume for halloween. I have four other siblings, and my mother never spent more than $50 on all four costumes, most of which were recycled over several years. It also allows you and your kids some fun bonding time as you riffle through the racks of clothing hunting for the perfect pieces. Plus, the money spent goes to a great cause!

hey jeeb!!

I agree you do have to show some trust in your kids, but I would say in limited amounts, if that makes any sense. I wouldn't trust my 11 year old to do certain things, but for other things I would. If your child makes good choices around you (and while you're there but they don't know you are watching), you can start to put them in other situations to see how they do.....But if your kid doesn't try in school, is disrespectful, doesn't do chores and treats siblings badly, I wouldn't trust them to do anything!! Depends on the kid and the parent's relationship with them!! But these days, you see parents being SO permissive and those kids get in just as much trouble, if not more, than the children of the strict parents. So,it's finding the balance.....I think we agree!!

It's not just Halloween that young girls are dressing like hookers.It's the parents that by these types of clothes that are at fault.They think its cute when little "Ashley" runs around in daisey dukes and halter tops,but then when she comes home pregnant,they're ready to press charges against someone.

Have you shopped in the girls 7-16 section,half of it looks like hoochie mama starter kits, it was a sad day when we had to move out of the 4-6x sizes. Why they even make this stuff for kids this age is beyond me. My 9 year old is going as Hannah Montana,pretty easy costume,I'm staying away from anything low cut or too short. If it isn't age appropriate then we are not buying it.

If parents didn't buy the hooker-looking clothes year round, compaines wouldn't make it......I think parents think their kids look cute, see nothing wrong with it and then are "shocked" when 12 year olds are pregnant, 15 year olds are on their 5th partner, and husband has an affair....it's all linked, people!! Men are visual and respond when they see women or girls in these skimpy clothers- halloween or not!!

I know what it is like having to shop for costumes in the adult area. My daughter is 8 yrs old and is 56" tall and weighs 105 lbs. She is not fat, she is an athlete and is solid. She is out of girls clothes and into Jrs. We keep tight control over the clothes that she puts on and the fact she goes to a private school with a dress code helps. I know the time is coming where she is going to want to dtess like a hoochie momma but she will come to her senses or she will be forever be on punishment.

It's not just halloween and tweens! This has been a pet peeve of mine for a long time.

i think the way pre-teens and teens dress is gotten sooooo out of hand. the costumes have been getting worse and worse over the years and the parents have allowed it and now want to complain! wake up!

I have to agree with wcnc. If people weren't buying this stuff in kid sizes, companies wouldn't make it. Only buy clothes from retailers that support modest clothes for children and teens and the others will get the message. As for 'dressing your 6 year old like a scank', here's and idea, say NO! As I tell my daughter when she tells me she hates me, "you can hate me while you are cleaning up (or whatever else I've asked her to do that she hates me for!)

omg.. I just have to say.. my daughter came home telling me about what one of my friend's daughter was going to be for halloween.. I was completely floored when she said "naughty school girl" now WTH#LL does a 13 year old know about being a naughty anything.. I expressed my concern to my friend but that seemed to have gone in one ear and out the other.. I just want to slap some ppl.... it makes u wonder why on earth some ppl were blessed with the ability to reproduce!!! sorry if i've stepped on any toes :-D

A wise friend once advised me to consider what the clothing styles that I allow my 3 year old to wear will look like own her when she is 14 years old. Thus I always taught her to dress appropriately and now that she is 18, she definately has her own style and is considerate and appropriate in what she chooses to wear. I am one proud mom!

Perhaps the stores should be made to feel uncomfortable selling this stuff. People need to speak up. It worked when people got together and boycotted Ambercrombie (on more than one occasion) for the various inappropriate ads and merchandise targeted to tweens and teens. Sales were negatively impacted and some of the products were pulled / ads changed. We should be able to count on the stores should stock appropriate items. For the people that need these trampy costumes, there are the "adult" stores.

I think you guys are a little uptight. I've been to the stores and I don't see how the costumes for kids are that inappropriate. Sure there are some here and there made for adult women, but overall, I didn't see anything wrong. Here is a tip, put something on under the outfit. I wanted to be a French maid one year and I had black pants and a black turtle neck under it. It looked great! With all of those costumes, you could do that. Another year I wanted to be a pirate lady. Same thing, just wore something under it. A costume is not going to get a tween pregnant!

Take a chill pill, be creative and HAVE A HAPPY HALLOWEEN!!! JEEZ!!!

Well I think I will take the kids Snipe hunting this year, lol. No harm in that old tradition, never been in the trick or treating thing, a good ole scare is halloween to me,lol, but good luck to the parents that do venture out. You know it's up to the parents and what little bit of discipline they can administer nowadays to determine what is appropriate and not.

It isn't just Halloween costumes either. Parents are trying to send their kids to SCHOOL in clothes that would be more appropriate on a 25 year old than a 12 year old.

Every day I have the battle of the midriff, the battle of the low rise/too tight jeans, the battle of the spaghetti strap and the battle of the cleavage with at least one of my 6th grade students. I am more worried about their everyday clothes becoming more modest and age appropriate.

And another thing...

Why is it that only the girl's costumes are targeted here? Here we go, a return to the 1950's where women were forced to stay in the kitchen and slave away to their husband. It scares me that we seem to be going back to that mentality. Women that are inferior and have to hide behind a cloak of modesty. Our bodies are beautiful, why should they be hidden like the Muslims?

You can show yourself off without being a S--T. I looked good in high school ya'll and I didn't sleep around, nor did I get pregnant.

My daughter is completely stuck in this middle ground too; she's 12 years old and wants a costume, but the "teen" costumes are trampy and the kid costumes are better suited for first graders.

We did a costume workshop at my kids' store in an effort to help out. We called it, "Beyond Pirates and Princesses," and a Hollywood costume designer friend and I helped kids assemble their own creative costumes from found materials/thrift store items/craft supplies. It was a blast, and the parents and kids loved having something age-appropriate and original.

I hope that my store for tween (girls and boys) can be a resource for parents steamed about chain fashion styles; we carry stylish clothes that both the kids and their parents love. No hoochie- mamas-in-training here, thanks!

Kristen www.juvieshop.com

I had to pick up some stuff from a party store for my sons Bday. I had the same thoughts. I though they were grown up costumes, then I noticed they were for little girls. The same thing in dept. stores for clothes, they have pic of little girls w/ hoe paint (not a little blush and base). I don't have a hang up w/ skin or bods. You have to be careful of what you ask for, you might get it (weather you want it or not). I myself wear collar and sleaves, I have a bunch of tee shirts I don't wear them to sell jobs or to be seen. I am treated very diffrent depending on what I wear, I'm luckey that I know this (some folks just don't get it. I had long hair for years (you could not tell me it was long ( I was blind to it)) I would scare folks and I didn't know it, untill they got to know me and would tell me or thier friends about the first time meeting me. I was a gent inside , look like a hippy/freak on the out side (the sayings onmy tee shirts didn't help any) Now they think I'm a gent;-)

If parents keep puting there kids in a tight grip they are not going to be happy when they are older. Just think about talking to you kids insted of trying to control 27/7

I like the post that said that costums do not get young girls pregnant, no it just gives them the reputation and thats where it all starts. If you start letting them dress like that- some one said a naughty school girl than what do you think they will do the next year? Half dressed nurse? Its not about haveing control and useing it, it's about looking out for there safty. If I have the body and would not ware it why should I let my little girls where it. I even made a comment about a costume this year that I like for me to my husband - he said I should buy it and ware it when we take our little girl trick or treating. My comment- the only place I would where that is in our bedroom for his eyes. Point is if I wore that (I would never)in front of my girls how could I say not for them to wear it now or later in life. Parents are to blame, as well as the kids its a test.

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